CGTN: China calls for global green revolution in the post-COVID era

CGTN

PR85785

 

BEIJING, Sept. 24, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --

 

As the world struggles to revive the economy amid the lingering COVID-19

pandemic, China has called for global efforts to launch a green revolution and

pledged to achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

 

Video - https://cdn5.prnasia.com/202009/cgtn/video.mp4 

 

View the original report: Link

(https://news.cgtn.com/news/2020-09-22/Xi-Jinping-China-aims-to-achieve-carbon-n

eutrality-by-2060-TZX22EfJiE/index.html?utm_source=bluef&utm_medium=website&utm_

campaign=greenrevolution )

 

"COVID-19 reminds us that humankind should launch a green revolution and move

faster to create a green way of development and life," Chinese President Xi

Jinping said in an address delivered via video link to the General Debate of

the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday.

 

Xi urged all countries to "take decisive steps" to honor the 2015 Paris

Agreement on climate change, under which nearly 200 countries pledged to

control greenhouse gas emissions to keep a global temperature rise this century

well below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and pursue efforts

to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

 

China aims to "have CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon

neutrality before 2060," he said.

 

He also called for a "green recovery of the world economy in the post-COVID

era" and efforts to achieve sustainable development in all countries.

 

Xi's message won much applause. "Today's announcement by President Xi Jinping

that China intends to reach carbon neutrality before 2060 is big and important

news," said Todd Stern, U.S. climate envoy under the Obama administration who

worked on brokering a bilateral climate agreement with China in 2014. He called

the announcement an "encouraging" step.

 

The pledge was also welcomed by the European Union. "I welcome the announcement

by President Xi that China has set a date for its CO2 emissions to peak and

will become carbon neutral before 2060," said Frans Timmermans, vice president

for the European Green Deal.

 

China gets greener

 

As the largest developing country and the second-largest economy in the world,

China is working hard to coordinate economic growth and environmental protection.  

 

On the one hand, it is transforming its economic structure and growth pattern

as part of the efforts to pursue high-quality development; on the other hand,

the country has included fighting pollution among its "three tough battles" –

alongside fighting major risks and poverty – on its way to deliver a moderately

prosperous society by 2020.

 

Xi has always attached great importance to environmental protection and green

development.

 

Fifteen years ago, as secretary of the Zhejiang Provincial Committee of the

Communist Party of China (CPC), he proposed a concept that "lucid waters and

lush mountains are invaluable assets," which later became a famous idea on

green development nationwide.

 

After becoming general secretary of the CPC Central Committee and president of

China, Xi repeatedly stressed the importance of ecological protection at many

occasions including during his inspection tours across the country.

 

China, once struggling with severe environmental problems such as frequent smog

and widespread water pollution, is making remarkable progress in green

development and contributing to the cause worldwide.

 

The country is on track to exceed its Intended Nationally Determined

Contributions by 2030 under the Paris agreement thanks to its efforts to cut

growth in energy use and reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

 

CO2 emissions per unit of GDP have dropped by nearly half compared with 2005,

accomplishing in advance the targets set to reduce 40 to 45 percent from the

2005 levels by 2020. And the pledge for 2030 is to lower CO2 emissions per unit

of GDP by 60 to 65 percent from the 2005 levels, with the CO2 emissions

reaching a peak by 2030.

 

In 2019, an environmental study by NASA concluded that between 2000 and 2017,

China had been responsible for over a quarter of the new green areas created

worldwide, making it the world's biggest contributor in this field.  

 

To support the global combat against climate change, Xi in 2015 pledged a

20-billion-yuan (three billion U.S. dollars) China South-South Climate Cooperation

Fund, which was dedicated to help other developing countries win the fight.

 

Last year, China launched the International Coalition for Green Development on

the Belt and Road to facilitate the implementation of the UN 2030 Agenda for

Sustainable Development through a green construction of the Belt and Road.

 

"We call on all countries to pursue innovative, coordinated, green and open

development for all, seize the historic opportunities presented by the new

round of scientific and technological revolution and industrial transformation,

achieve a green recovery of the world economy in the post-COVID era and thus

create a powerful force driving sustainable development," Xi said on Tuesday.

 

China is walking the talk.

 

SOURCE  CGTN

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